Disparity in female and Asian representation amongst cardiology journal editorial boards members: a call for empowerment

QJM. 2022 Dec 12;115(12):830-836. doi: 10.1093/qjmed/hcac176.

Abstract

Background: While progress is evident in gender and ethnic representation in the workplace, this disparity remains prevalent in academic positions.

Objectives: We examined gender and Asian ethnic representation in editorial boards of cardiology journals.

Methods: A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using publicly available data on Cardiology and Cardiovascular medicine journals in the first quartile of the 2020 Scimago Journal & Country Rank indicator. The proportions of female and Asian editorial board members, associate editors and editors-in-chief were assessed. Subgroup analyses were conducted based on the journal's geographical origin, subspecialty and demographic of the editor-in-chief.

Results: Seventy-six cardiology journals, involving 8915 editorial board members, were included. Only 19.6% of editorial board members were female, 20.8% Asians and 4.0% Asian females. There were less female representation amongst editors-in-chief (9.9%) compared to associate editors (22.3%). European (18.1%) and North American-based journals (21.1%) had higher female representation compared to Asian-based journals (8.7%). There was lower Asian representation in European (18.1%) and North American-based journals (19.9%) compared to Asian-based journals (72.3%). Females were underrepresented in interventional (14.5%) journals, while Asians were underrepresented in general cardiology (18.3%) and heart failure (18.3%) journals. Journals led by female editors-in-chief had significantly higher female representation compared to male-led ones, while journals with Asian editors-in-chief had greater Asian representation compared to non-Asian led ones.

Conclusion: This study highlights the female and Asian ethnic underrepresentation in academic roles in cardiology journal editorial boards. Further analysis is needed for other ethnicities, while the community pushes towards gender-balanced and ethnic diversity across editorial boards.

MeSH terms

  • Asian*
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Female
  • Gender Equity*
  • Humans
  • Male